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Nicarao (cacique)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nicaraguan cacique, whose real name was Macuilmiquiztli
Macuilmiquiztli
Monument to Macuilmiquiztli in Nicaragua.
Monument to Macuilmiquiztli in Nicaragua.
Born1485
Nicānāhuac
Died1540
OccupationRuler of Kwawkapolkan
Known forResisting theSpanish conquest of Nicaragua

Nicarao, orMacuilmiquiztli (NahuatlMakwilmikistli:macuil "five",miquiztli "death") was the most powerful ruler inpre-ColumbianNicaragua, whosechiefdom stretched from modern-dayRivas in southwestern Nicaragua toGuanacaste province in northwesternCosta Rica.[1][2][3] He was theNahua chief ofKwawkapolkan, which means "place of capulín trees" in theNawat language.[4] It's a combination of the Nawat wordsKwawit (tree),[5][6]kapol (capulín),[7][8] and-kan (a locative meaning "place of"). Based on research done by historians in 2002, it was discovered that the chief's real name was Macuilmiquiztli, meaning "Five Deaths" in theNahuatl language.[9][10][11][12] Macuilmiquiztli governed one of the many Nahua chiefdoms in western Nicaragua that the Spanish came to call theNicaraos, who inhabited a shared land they referred to as Nicānāhuac.[13][14][15][16][17][18]

Biography

[edit]

Not much is known about Macuilmiquiztli's background. He was born in Nicānāhuac (western Nicaragua) in 1485. He was intelligent and well educated as well as a talented warrior.[19] According to Spanish conquistadorsGil González Dávila andGonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés, who was also a historian, Macuilmiquiztli had a cousin named "Wemak" who was the chief of Kakawatan, another Nahua chiefdom in present-dayRivas.[20][21][22][23]

Spanish contact

[edit]

At the time of Spanish arrival,Gil González Dávila traveled to western Nicaragua with a small army of just over 100 men made up of conquistadors and theirTlaxcalteca allies. They explored the fertile western valleys and were impressed with the Nahua and Otomanguean civilizations for the vast amounts of food they had in addition to their flourishing markets, permanent temples, and trade network.[20][24][25] Despite the good first impression however, Dávila referred to the Nahuas andChorotegas aslos rojos ("the reds" inSpanish), and their children asrojitos ("little red kids" in Spanish) which were derogatory terms based on skin color.[20] Eventually, Dávila met with Macuilmiquiztli, and conversed with him throughTlaxcalan translators. Macuilmiquiztli initially welcomed the Spanish and their Tlaxcalteca allies. However, Dávila and his army used the opportunity to gather gold andbaptize some of the Nahuas along the way, much to Macuilmiquiztli's disapproval. When Dávila demanded the now skeptical Macuilmiquiztli, as well as chiefs Wemak andDiriangén who were also present, to be baptized, to renounce their pagan beliefs, and to hand over the rest of their gold and jewellery, they refused.[20] Realizing the threat that the Spanish imposed, Macuilmiquiztli, as well as the Chorotegas, waged war against the invaders, and Nahua and Chorotega warriors forced Dávila and his men to retreat to Panama.[26][27][28][29] This set the stage for what would become theSpanish conquest of Nicaragua in1524 CE.

Nahua-Chorotega alliance

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Despite the enmity between the Chorotegas and Nahuas, Macuilmiquiztli and Diriangén made peace and agreed to team up against the Spanish and Tlaxcaltecas. This alliance composed of the Nahua chiefdoms of Kwawkapolkan, Kakawatan and the Otomanguean Chorotegas, all of whom fought together against the Spanish and their central-Mexican allies.[30][31] The Indigenous alliance lost the war however, when Nicaragua was invaded on all sides by several Spanish forces, each led by aconquistador. González Dávila was authorized by royal decree to invade from the Caribbean coast of Honduras.Francisco Hernández de Córdoba at the command of the governor ofPanama invaded fromCosta Rica.Pedro de Alvarado at the command ofHernán Cortés, came fromGuatemala throughSan Salvador andHonduras.[32]Francisco Hernández de Córdoba fought directly against the alliance, and by 1525 the alliance had completely collapsed. Diriangén escaped the Spanish onslaught but eventually died between 1527-1529, Wemak was captured and executed in 1525 after the last of his Kakawatec forces were annihilated by the conquistadors and Tlaxcaltecas, and the fall of Kwawkapolkan in 1525 finalized their defeat.[33][34]

Legacy and martyrdom

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Macuilmiquiztli and Diriangén remain popular figures in Nicaraguan nationalism and anti-imperialism, so much so that TheNational Assembly of Nicaragua declared the two Indigenous leaders as national heroes.[35] In addition, Macuilmiquiztli as well as Diriangén are credited with leading the resistance against the Spanish and Tlaxcaltecas, and are symbols of Indigenous resistance against imperialism. Furthermore, their alliance highlights a powerful lesson in teamwork between enemies who set aside their differences and came together to oppose a much greater threat.

Territory

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Territorial map showing the boundaries of "Kwawkapolkan" just west ofLake Nicaragua in the sixteenth century before the arrival of the Spaniards.

The territory orcacicazgo ruled over by Nicarao was situated in theisthmus of what is now known as Nicaragua'sRivas Department, next toLake Nicaragua, and it extended southward to what is now known as theGuanacaste Province in northwestern Costa Rica. The tribe's capital city or principal settlement was called Kwawkapolkan,[36][37][38][39] though it has sometimes been referred to in history books as Nicaraocallí,[39] and it is believed to have been situated near the modern lake port ofSan Jorge.

Name controversy and etymology

[edit]

In 2002, through the research done by two Nicaraguan historians working independently of each other, it was discovered that the true name of the cacique was actually Macuilmiquiztli, which meant "Five Deaths" in theNahuatl language.[40][39][41][42]

It is not known how the name "Nicarao" came to be associated with chief Macuilmiquiztli as the letter "r" does not exist in the Nawat language.[43] The etymology of the term "Nicarao" most likely originated as a shortened andhispanicized form of "Nicānāhuac", the name used by the Nicaraos to refer to western Nicaragua. This is evident in the Spaniards use of the rootNica in "Nicarao" which derives from NahuatlNican.[44][45] Andrés de Cereceda, the treasurer of González Dávila's expedition,[39] wrote in his log the names of the caciques of the villages where gold was collected. In the vicinity of Costa Rica'sGulf of Nicoya, they found the largest indigenous village they had visited, which was ruled by a cacique named Chorotega. Since then, linguistic sources have used the name of that cacique as aneponym, "Chorotega people", to encompass a number of villages which had cultural and linguistic similarities despite being physically separated.

According to a once-popular theory, the name "Nicaragua" was derived from aportmanteau of the name Nicarao and the Spanish wordagua which means "water", due to the presence of two large lakes and other bodies of water in the country.[46] However, this theory is considered to be outdated by most historians due to the fact that the cacique's real name was Macuilmiquiztli and not Nicarao. In addition the Nicaraos referred to the land as Nicānāhuac, which most historians now believe is the true etymology of "Nicaragua". It is a combination of the words "Nican" (here),[47] and "Ānāhuac", which in turn is a combination of the words "atl" (water) and "nahuac", a locative meaning "surrounded". Therefore the literal translation ofNicanahuac is "here surrounded by water", fitting the theory that the etymology references the large bodies of water in and around the country, thePacific Ocean, lakesNicaragua andXolotlan, and the rivers and lagoons.[48][49][50][51][52][53]

References

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  1. ^"The Kingdom of this world".
  2. ^"The Aboriginals of Costa Rica".
  3. ^"Las culturas indígenas y su medioambiente".
  4. ^"Cocibolca y Xolotlán: Relectura de sus toponimias indígenas"(PDF).
  5. ^"Pipil (Nahuat) talking dictionary: tree".
  6. ^"living dictionaries: pipil nahuat: tree".
  7. ^Campbell, Lyle (January 1, 1985).The Pipil Language of El Salvador. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 10–12.ISBN 978-3-11-088199-8.
  8. ^"The history of the word for Cacao in ancient Mesoamerica".
  9. ^"Nicarao"
  10. ^"Encuentro"
  11. ^Sánchez, Edwin (October 3, 2016)."De Macuilmiquiztli al Güegüence pasando por Fernando Silva" [From Macuilmiquizli to Güegüence through Fernando Silva].El 19 (in Spanish). RetrievedApril 12, 2017.
  12. ^Silva, Fernando (March 15, 2003)."Macuilmiquiztli".El Nuevo Diario (in Spanish). RetrievedApril 12, 2017.
  13. ^"Origin of the names of the Latin American countries".
  14. ^"The curious story of the origin of the names of Latin American countries".
  15. ^"Nicaragua".
  16. ^"Nahuatl Dictionary".
  17. ^"Etymology of Nicaragua".
  18. ^"Nicaraguan place names"(PDF).
  19. ^McCafferty and McCafferty 2009
  20. ^abcdVida de González Dávila, Gil. Ávila, c. 1480 – 21.IV.1526. Descubridor y conquistador. et al., 2012
  21. ^Los Indios precolombinos de Nicaragua y Costa Rica en los siglos XV y XVI, 2009 - Bolaños, Enrique
  22. ^Historia de la Gran Nicoya en el sur de Mesoamérica, Jiménez-Santana 1997
  23. ^Colonización de américa, cuando la historia marcha, de Oviedo y Valdés, Gonzalo c. 1480–1557, 2006
  24. ^"The Kingdom Of This World".
  25. ^"Costa Rican Archaeology and Mesoamerica"(PDF).
  26. ^"Fruit and Axes of Gold Consuming Indigenous Heritages in Nicaragua".
  27. ^"The Testimonies and Origins of the Nicaraos"(PDF).Archived(PDF) from the original on 2024-03-13. Retrieved2024-03-03.
  28. ^SMITH, JULIAN."Who Were the People of Greater Nicoya? - Archaeology Magazine".www.archaeology.org.
  29. ^"About Nicaragua: History up to 1979".www.nicaraguasc.org.uk. Retrieved2020-03-09.
  30. ^Los Indios precolombinos de Nicaragua y Costa Rica en los siglos XV y XVI, 2009 - Bolaños, Enrique
  31. ^Historia de la Gran Nicoya en el sur de Mesoamérica, Jiménez-Santana 1997
  32. ^Duncan, David Ewing,Hernando de Soto – A Savage Quest in the Americas – Book II: Consolidation, Crown Publishers, Inc., New York, 1995
  33. ^Los Indios precolombinos de Nicaragua y Costa Rica en los siglos XV y XVI, 2009 - Bolaños, Enrique
  34. ^Historia de la Gran Nicoya en el sur de Mesoamérica, Jiménez-Santana 1997
  35. ^"Nicaragua Condemns-Colonialism to Commemorate 500 Years of Indigenous Resistance".
  36. ^"Cocibolca y Xolotlán: Relectura de sus toponimias indígenas"(PDF).
  37. ^Paul Healy; Mary Pohl (1980).Archaeology of the Rivas Region, Nicaragua. Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press. p. 21.ISBN 978-0-88920-094-4.
  38. ^Erika Dyck; Christopher Fletcher (October 6, 2015).Locating Health: Historical and Anthropological Investigations of Place and Health. Routledge. p. 107.ISBN 978-1-317-32278-8.
  39. ^abcd"Encuentro del cacique y el conquistador" [Encounter of the cacique and the conqueror].El Nuevo Diario (in Spanish). April 4, 2009. RetrievedMay 17, 2017.
  40. ^Sánchez, Edwin (September 16, 2002). "No hubo Nicarao, todo es invento" [There was no Nicarao, it's all invented].El Nuevo Diario (in Spanish).
  41. ^Sánchez, Edwin (October 3, 2016)."De Macuilmiquiztli al Güegüence pasando por Fernando Silva" [From Macuilmiquizli to Güegüence through Fernando Silva].El 19 (in Spanish). RetrievedApril 12, 2017.
  42. ^Silva, Fernando (March 15, 2003)."Macuilmiquiztli".El Nuevo Diario (in Spanish). RetrievedApril 12, 2017.
  43. ^"Etimología de Nicaragua".
  44. ^"nican: NAHUATL DICTIONARY".
  45. ^"Ensayos Nicaragüenses"(PDF).
  46. ^Sánchez, Edwin (October 16, 2016)."El origen de "Nicarao-agua": la Traición y la Paz" [The origin of "Nicarao-agua": Betrayal and Peace].El Pueblo Presidente (in Spanish). Archived from the original on August 1, 2017. RetrievedJuly 6, 2017.
  47. ^"Nahuatl Dictionary: Nican".
  48. ^"Origin of the names of the Latin American countries".
  49. ^"The curious story of the origin of the names of Latin American countries".
  50. ^"Nicaragua".
  51. ^"Nahuatl Dictionary".
  52. ^"Etymology of Nicaragua".
  53. ^"Nicaraguan place names"(PDF).
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